At UCLA, I've had the pleasure of serving as TA for courses at all levels: lower- and upper-division undergraduate, Master's, and PhD.
My teaching philosophy centers on distilling complex concepts to their essentials and explaining them in the most intuitive way possible—often by drawing analogies from everyday life that make abstract ideas tangible. I aim to make potentially abstruse concepts accessible to students from different backgrounds, convey their relevance for understanding real-world phenomena, and help students appreciate the elegance and intellectual beauty of economic theory.
Here are the courses I have served as TA for at UCLA:
Microeconomic Theory (Undergraduate, Econ 11) — Profs. Maurizio Mazzocco and Chris Surro (2022-2023)
Organization of Firms (Undergraduate, Econ 106I) — Prof. Moritz Meyer-ter-Vehn (2023-2024)
Designed Markets (Undergraduate, Econ 106D) — Prof. Alexander W. Bloedel (2025)
Incentives, Information, and Markets (Master's, Econ 421) — Prof. Simon Board (2021)
Microeconomics: Asymmetric Information (1st-Year PhD Micro III, Econ 201C) — Prof. Simon Board (2022-2025)